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MUNM 3113 Prof. Arana
World Music Study Guide Exam 1
RHYTHM • Rhythm: Time-relation among succession of sounds. • Meter: Groups pulses into recurring patterns of strong and weak beats • Ostinato: Interlocking, repeating parts that create multiple accents and a shifting sense of
meter (in much African traditional music) • Pulse: Regularly occurring beats of equal weight. • Syncopation: The accenting of “off-beats”, which generate rhythmic excitement. • Tempo: The speed of the music. 4 Types of rhythm 1. Free rhythm: A rhythm without a recurring accent pattern. 2. Even-pulsed rhythm: All beats are stressed the same with one beat. 3. Metrical rhythm: A rhythm with a regularly recurring accent pattern. 4. Polyrhythm: Simultaneous sounding of multiple rhythmic frameworks. Meters • Duple meter (2/4): Alternating strong and weak stressed beats (e.g. marches) • Triple meter (3/4): Beats grouped in threes with a stressed pulse on one. • Compound meter: Larger groupings of beats divided into regularly occurring patterns of
strong and weak (e.g. track 16) o Compound duple (6/8): Two beats divided into three equal parts o Compound triple (9/8): Three beats divided into three parts o Compound quadruple (12/8): Four beats divided into thee parts
• Poly meter: The use of different meters overlapping each other. • 5, 7, 10, 11 beat meter MELODY • Pitch: The frequency of a tone.
Octave: Two tones, of which the frequency of one is precisely twice that of the other. • Interval: The distance between two tones (pitch relationships). • Emphasis: The way major tones of the melody are approached/handled, and this adds
feeling (vibrato, trills, grace notes). • Vibrato: Vibrate the sound to add fullness. • Scale: An ordered, stepwise arrangement of tones within an octave (subdivisions of the
octave). We have Major and Minor scales (happy and sad). • Tonic: The basic tone, to which the melody seems to be gravitating. • Raga: A set of organized melodic matrix inside of which the south Indian singer or
musician improvises melodically in performance. • Vocables: Syllables that do not make up words
TIMBRE • Timbre: The quality of sound of an instrument or voice (tonal quality or color). • Aesthetics: A branch of philosophy concerned with ideas of beauty, pleasure, enjoyment,
form, and affect. • Affect: The powers in an object or experience that make a person feel something in
response. • Portamento: A slide • Overtone series: The overtones of the series that resonate along with the fundamental
pitch determine the timbre of the sound. • Organology: The study of musical instruments • Pa Yin: An eight-part system • Musica Mundana: A three-part system. Influence of the timbre 1. Material 2. Method of generating sound 3. Technique 4. Aesthetic choices The Sachs-Hornbostel system 1. Aerophone: Instruments where columns of air vibrate. 2. Chordophone: Instruments where stretched string vibrate 3. Membranophone: Instruments where stretched material or membrane vibrate. 4. Idiophone: Instruments where the object itself vibrate. 5. Electrophone: Instruments where something electrical vibrate. HARMONY • Harmony: Simultaneous sounding of two or more pitches, and it is directly related to
texture. • Chords: Tones that sound simultaneously. • Drone: An unchanging tone or group of tones sounding continuously, against which the
melody moves. A drone is not a melody. • Falsetto: A high voice that comes from the head rather than the chest. Types of harmony 1. Consonant harmony: Perfect harmony, which sounds pleasant, involving compatible
tones. 2. Dissonant harmony: Not a perfect harmony, which sounds edgy or restless. TEXTURE • Texture: Structure, method, and the density of sound. • Musical texture: 1) The organization of music into one or more simultaneously sounding
parts, and 2) the ways in which these parts relate to each other.
Categories of musical texture 1. Monophony: A single melody (music in one part). 2. Heterophony: Two or more voices/instruments elaborating the same melody in slightly
different ways (variations of the same musical line). 3. Polyphony: A combination of two or more distinct melodies (multi-part music). 4. Homophony: A dominant melody with accompanying harmony (multi-part with one
dominant part). FORM • Genre: A named, standard unit of the repertory. • Musical phase: A small series of musical tones that is understood as a meaningful group
or unit. • Musical style: The way music sounds are organized, according to a group’s aesthetics. • Alap: A characteristic slow opening section for North Indian music performances. • Tail: The last brief section of a song. • Musical form: The structure of a musical piece or performance: how it is put together and
how it works. • Call-and-response: A musical form, e.g. work songs, religious usage, and musical
conversations. • 12-bar blues: Strophic form (made up of stanzas or verses, and each stanza uses the same
overall musical structure). 3 Musical forms 1. Binary form: Music in a two-part structure (AA BB) 2. Ternary form: Music in a three-part structure (A B A) 3. Sonata form: Music in a three-part structure (exposition, development, recapitulation). MUSIC-CULTURE • Culture: The way of life of a people, transmitted from one generation to the next. • Material culture: Material objects that people in a culture produce. • Bosnian Ganga: Group singing characterized by very close harmonies, which cause the
voices to acoustically beat or clash against each other. • Repertory: A stock of music that is ready to be performed, and a music culture’s
repertory is what most people think of as the “music itself”. 4 components of a music culture 1. Ideas about music (belief, aesthetics, contexts, history) 2. Activities involving music 3. Repertoires of music (style, genres, texts, composition, transmission, movement) 4. Material culture of music Style: Includes everything related to the organization of musical sound itself. • Pitch elements: Scale, melody, harmony, and tuning systems • Time elements: rhythm and meter • Timbre elements: Voice quality, and instrumental tone color • Sound intensity: Loudness/softness
UNIT 1 CD: ELEMENTS OF MUSIC 1. Tsuru No Sugomori (Japanese Shakuhachi)
! Free rhythm ! Heterophony ! Rhythm determined by flute player’s breath ! From the Buddhist culture ! “Ma” – the void where potential exist
2. Fiddle Solo (Irish) ! Free rhythm ! Monophony ! Rhythm determined by bow length
3. Roisin Dubh (Irish sean-nós-style lament) ! Free rhythm ! Monophony ! Female voice
4. Amazing Grace (USA) ! Free rhythm ! Rhythm determined by lead singer ! Choir accompanying the lead singer
5. Pole Dance Song (Native American / Navajo) ! Even pulse ! Homophony – non-pitched rhythm ! Navajo
6. Jor in Rag Kamod (Sitar improvisation, North India) ! Even pulse ! Homophony – drone ! String instrument (one is the leading one, and a tanpura)
7. Stars & Stripes Forever (USA / John P. Sousa) ! Duple meter ! March song ! Downbeat on 1 (1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2)
8. Scotland the Brave (Scottish March) ! Duple meter ! Homophony – drone ! March song ! The bagpipe is the leading instrument
9. Rosie (prison work song: USA) ! Duple meter ! Blues ! Call-and-response ! Lead voice – accompanying voices answer
10. Ain’t Enough Comin’ In (USA / Otis Rush) ! Duple meter ! Homophony – chords, ostinato, harmony ! Drums " Ostentation pattern ! 12-bar-blues
11. Jingle Bells (USA: Ella Fitzgerald) ! Duple meter ! Homophony – chords, ostinato, harmony ! Piano (ignores downbeat)
12. Gum Tree Canoe (waltz) ! Triple meter ! Heterophony (voices and string instrument) ! String instruments – violin ! Voices sing, same melody, different tones
13. Welsh Song (waltz) ! Triple meter ! Polyphony
14. Tar Road to Sligo (Irish Jig) ! Compound meter – duple ! First note is downbeat
15. The Ivory Flute / Straddle the Donkey / Visit to Ireland (a set of 3 Irish Jigs) ! Compound meter – duple ! Flute as lead instrument, with string instrument accompanying
16. Meg Gray / Sweetbriar (a set of 2 contra dance reels) ! Compound meter – triple ! String instrument and drums
17. Pint of Reference (Irish Slip Jig) ! Compound meter – triple (9/8) ! Homophony (flute instrument and string instrument)
18. Vamos Pa’Manabi (Bombo from Ecuador) ! Poly meter ! The two string instruments play different melodies
19. Talavadya Kacceri: Eka Tala (South India / percussion & voice) ! 5-beat meter (5/8) ! 1 2 1 2 3
20. Take Five (USA / Dave Brubeck Quartet) ! 5-beat meter (5/8) ! Jazz – saxophone as lead instrument ! Several downbeats 1 2 3 1 2
21. Macedonian Oro in 7/8 time (From Flook) ! 7-beat meter (7/8) ! 1 2 3 - 1 2 - 1 2
22. Samai Lami (Arabic Classical Music) ! 10-beat meter (10/8) ! String instrument and drums ! Two compound beats and two simple beats ! 1 2 3 - 1 2 3 - 1 2 3 4
23. Hristianova Kopanitsa (Ivo Papsov, Wedding music / Bulgaria) 11/8 (2+2+3+2+2) ! 11-beat meter (11/8) ! 1 2 – 1 2 – 1 2 3 – 1 2 – 1 2
24. Chidori (Japanese Shakuhachi, Koto, and Voice) ! Heterophony ! Free rhythm ! Flute and string instrument ! Rhythm determined by breath
25. Mountain Road (Irish Reel) ! Heterophony ! Duple meter ! Binary
26. Vocal Improvisation in Adi Tala (South India) ! Homophony – drone
! Voice technique ! Voice is the lead singer
27. Alima Girls Initiation (Uganda) ! Polyphony ! Ostinato ! Call-and-response ! Individual singers provide variations
28. Bach Fugue in G minor ! Polyphony ! Starts as monophony, then polyphony when second piano comes in ! Several downbeats
29. Potato Head (Louis Armstrong and his Hot Seven) ! Polyphony ! Jazz ! Tuba on downbeat ! 1 2 – 1 2- 1 2 3 4
30. Oya’s Song (Ubaka Hill) ! Polyphony – rhythmic polyphony
31. Hassanbegura ! Polyphony ! Eastern Europe ! Drinking song ! Sang by men sitting by the table
MUNM 3113 Prof. Arana
Study Guide Exam 2: Africa Vocabulary
! TUBS notation: Time Unit Box System ! Ostinatos: repeated rhythmic and melodic cycles ! Interlocking parts: absence of a common guide pulse as a reference point ! Polymeter: multiple melodic parts performing at once
Ewe / Agbekor Tradition (tracks 2 & 3) Ewe history and culture
! Ewe: minority ethnic group in Ghana and Togo with a reputation as warriors, extended family-based social order, and spiritual view of music that attributes fortune and talents to ancestral spirits – creators of the Agbekor music
! Yoruba: sing about the immigration from Nigeria to Benin to between Ghana and Togo
! Triumph over adversity is an important theme in their oral history ! The important unit of Ewe social life is lineage – the extended family ! Mawu: the Ewe supreme, that is remote from the affairs of humanity ! Se: embodies God’s attributes of law, order and harmony, Se is the maker and
keeper of human souls, Se is destiny ! The ancestor whose spirit they have inherited is the source of the Ewe musicians
talent; destiny is the reason why they are so involved in music making ! In Ewe music-culture, most music and dance is learned through enculturation,
but Agbekor requires special training because of its complexity Agbekor
! Agbekor is a form of music created by the Ewe people – means “clear life” ! The original occasion for a performance used to be war, but is now adapted to
non-war purposes, such as funerals due to passions aroused by death ! This drumming style was learned by Ewe hunters from monkeys (legend) ! A complex lead drumming part rides on a rich polyrhythmic texture established
by an ensemble of bells, rattles, and drums ! Makes use of language tonality to “speak” with drums ! An Agbekor group practice for up to a year before they perform, and perform
one specific style, unless they are professional ! Agbekor ensemble: consist of a rectangle within a circle, traditionally composed
of 10 male drummers, 15 male dancers, and 15 female singers ! The dances are rigorous through dancing and singing ! These days, most Ewes value their traditional repertory of music and dance as
cultural resource ! Young people often join groups because rehearsals and performances are social
opportunities
Agbekor instruments ! Gankogui (double-bell)
o The time-keeper ! Axatse (gourd shaker)
o Mark four equal units within each bell-phrase o Played by many people at once – vital to the ensemble’s energy
! Kaganu (baby drum) o The textural density (silent-stroke-stroke) o High pitch and dry timbre
! Kloboto & Totodzi (twin brothers) o Kloboto add multidimensional quality with a brief bounce-press o Totodzi match bell tones and four-feel beats
! Kidi (mother drum) o This part has three bounces and three presses
! Atsimevu (master drum, father) o Improvisation and cues
Agbekor performance and music features
! An Agbekor group consist of drummers, dancers and singers ! Agbekor follows a definite pattern, however it’s not rigidly formalized ! Agbekor is a group effort – music and dance help cement social feeling among
members of an Agbekor society ! Sections
o Adzo: introductory section (short sections) o Vutsotsoe: fast drumming o Adzokpi: dancing in front of lead singer o Vulolo: slow drumming o Vutsotsoe: up-tempo section o Adzokpi: solos section
! Texts o Subject of war o Celebrate the invincibility of Ewe warriors o Urge courage and loyalty o Reflect on death and express grief
! Structure o Call-and-response o Singers’ intonation is aimed at pitch areas rather than precise pith points
Mbira Tradition (tracks 4-10) History
! The Shona make up more than 95% of the country ! Since ca. 800 C.E, kingdoms of the Shona (and neighbors) have ruled large
territories, but in the 1800s the large-scale Shona states faded under pressure from other African groups, and became more decentralized, agricultural people
! Zimbabwe was formed in 1980 (previously referred to as Rhodesia) ! Music was a part in the struggle, where popular and traditional songs with
hidden meanings helped galvanize mass opinion ! The mbira became a positive symbol of cultural identity ! Robert Mugabe is the president of Zimbabwe, and is very corrupt – rigged
elections and is a dictator ! Cecil Rhodes: admired in the white community ! The repertoire of Shona is stable over many generations
Shona spirits
! From the perspective inherited from the Shona ancestors, four classes of spirits affect the world:
o Spirits of chiefs (mhondoro) o Family members (mudzimu) o Nonrelatives or animals (mashave) o Witches (muroyi)
! The spirits have sensory experience, feel emotions, and take action to help and advice their beloved descendants
! Mbira helps connect the living with their ancestors, communicating by means of possession trance, where a spirit enters a body of a living body, temporarily supplanting his/her spirit – the spirits love to hear their favorite pieces
The mbira
! Thumb piano used for healing – a performance usually include hand clapping, singing, and a driving rhythm played on a pair of gourd rattles (hosho)
! The mbira is tuned to a 7-pitch scale over a range of 3 octaves ! 4 features of construction
o A set of long, thin keys made of metal or plant material o A soundboard with a bridge that holds the keys o A resonator to shape and amplify the sound of the plucked keys o Jingles that buzz rhythmically when the keys are plucked
! Chuning refers to interval configurations, qualities of tone, sound projection, pitch level and overtones
! In performance, the mbira is placed within a large gourd resonator that brings out the instrument’s full tone
! Bottle cap rattles or snail shells attached to the soundboard adds extra timbre ! The keys are symbolically linked with features of culture ! Each key emits a fundamental pitch and a cluster of overtones ! The mbira takes on a life of its own ! Complex repeating cycles of harmony, melody, rhythm and counterpoint, where
each phrase requires three repetitions of the four-pulse pattern ! Improvise over normal chord progression – built on a repeating pattern
2 interlocking parts of a piece: creates a wonderfully multilayered sound ! Kushaura: the first part of the mbira that the lead player plays ! Kutsinhira: the interwoven second part of the mbira (acts as a counter melody)
3 vocal styles: adds depth to the musical texture and richness to the meanings expressed
! Low: soft style, pitched syllables ! Yodel: high-pitched yodels that express feelings that can’t be vocalized ! Text: sung or spoken – “deep shora” poetry and improvised text
Thomas Mapfumo & Chimurenga music
! Grew up in a rural area and played the mbira ! Learned guitar and played cover tunes of the Beatles ! Started singing pop songs in the Shona language and put political ideas in his
music – inspired the revolution ! In the early 1970s, he began writing more serious lyrics ! Chimurenga “the struggle” fighters ! He named his music after the fighters ! Recreated the mbira ensemble with modern instruments
Erica Azim
! Went to Zimbabwe to learn to play the mbira ! Convinced master mbira people to teach her ! She would play mbira at ceremonies, where people got possessed, which is like
the stamp approval as a mbira player o Repetition is key
Mande / Jaliya Tradition (tracks 11-15) History
! Sunjata Keita: founded the empire of Mali in the 13th century (south of Sahara) ! Mali was a wealthy, centralized, hierarchically organized empire with distinct
social classes ! Mande jalolu: professional sound artisans of the Mande ethnic tradition - their
duty was to serve their elite patrons, and transmit these ancient, secret mysteries to every member of the society
! Griot: praise singers (counselors to royalty, entertainers for public and guardians of history)
! In this music-culture, gifts to a jali respectful offerings to mark the interdependence of praiser and praised
! After 1600, the Sudanic empires experienced forces of change, which included internal rebellion
! Kingdoms developed at the western edge of the Mande heartland, and a distinctive music-culture of jali with kora developed in these kingdoms along the Gambia
! Today, the Mali empire people are scattered around between several countries Music culture
! The class you are born in is the class you stay in – boys inherit their father’s craft as a lifelong profession; young women marry within their fathers’ occupational group
! Their last name shows their social status and class ! After The Gambia became a British protectorate in 1894, the music culture
changed - wealth of the royals are reduced, and their patronage alone couldn’t sustain a jali
! Today jalolu must serve a broader clientele by freelancing at social occasions ! A jali learns the craft of playing a musical instrument in an apprentice-master
relationship during adolescence and young adulthood, ! Young women’s primary duty is to sing, and they participate in a more informal
apprenticeship ! The Jali’s knowledge
o A key element in jaliya is speech o Narratives in Gambian tradition refer to 2 historical periods: 1) the times
of Sunjata Keita and the formation of Mali (1200s), and 2) the times of the last mansas (1800s)
o Songs contain wise sayings about people and situations that are always relevant to the living
Social classes
! Wobility ! Merchants ! Skilled artisans (Jalolu/Griots) ! Farmers/Laborers ! Slaves
Instruments ! Balafon – a type of xylophone ! Kora – a spiked bridge harp used mainly to accompany praise songs ! Xalam – banjo-like long-necked lutes
Playing styles
! Kumbengo (instrumental ostinato): o Ostinato played on the strings of the kora, which is a basic pattern that
establishes the tonal and metric framework of a piece when it is repeated with subtle variation – accompanies the vocal style donkilo
o Small changes to the kumbengo are made to give the music interest ! Birimintingo (instrumental passages):
o Virtuosic passages that provide interludes between vocal sessions o More extensive ornamentation and improvisation
Vocal styles
! Donkilo: tuneful singing with several phrases of text – “call to dance” ! Sataro: open-ended, extemporaneous, passage of spoken or chanted text (less
melodic vocal passages) Salif Keita
! From Mali ! Born in a noble family, but because he is albino, he was sent to a foster home
with Griots ! Famous singer
Generalizations about African music culture Music-making events
! African music often happen in social situations where the primary goal is not artistic, but for ceremonies (life cycle rituals, festivals), work (subsistence, child care, domestic chores, wage labor), or play (games, parties, love making)
! Postal workers: work song to lift the workers mood ! Ewe/Agbekor: ceremonies – war, funerals (life cycle rituals and subsistence) ! Shona/Mbira: healing purpose – possession trance (life cycle rituals) ! Mande/Jaliya: entertainment
Multimedia expression ! Just as Africans set music in a social context, they associate it with other
expressive media, such as drama, dance, poetry, costuming and sculpture, and esthetic qualities are valued
! Ewe/Agbekor: drumming, dancing, singing ! Shona/Mbira: hand clapping, gourd rattles, mbira and song (low, yodel, text) ! Mande/Jaliya: balafon, kora, and song (donkilo, sataro)
Musical style ! African stylistic features polyrhythm, repetition and improvisation ! Postal workers: the melody has European qualities, such as duple meter, a major
scale, and harmony, and whistling ! Ewe/Agbekor: call-and-response, repetition, polymetric overlapping ! Shona/Mbira: polyphonic and polymetric, repetition, improvise over normal
chord progression ! Mande/Jaliya: metrical rhythm, improvisation
History ! Music-cultures of Europe, Asia, and America have had strong impact in Africa ! Foreigners have brought Africa their instruments, musical repertories, and ideas ! Ewe/Agbekor: minority group from Ghana and Togo, warriors ! Shona/Mbira: 95% of country, Zimbabwe ! Mande/Jaliya: Mali empire, social classes
Participation ! Much African music share the generous, open-hearted quality that welcomes
participation ! Ewe/Agbekor: group effort, participation with dancing ! Shona/Mbira: participation with hand clapping and song ! Mande/Jaliya: creative participatory listening, hand clapping
Training ! A musical education depends on a society-wide process of enculturation ! Africans learn a way-of-being in response to music ! Ewe/Agbekor: groups practice for about a year ! Shona/Mbira: hard to learn, mostly men ! Mande/Jaliya: apprentice-master learning
Beliefs and values ! Often, Africans conceive of music as necessary and normal part of life ! Ewe/Agbekor: spiritual view, ancestors and destiny ! Shona/Mbira: shona spirits, mbira takes a life of its own ! Mande/Jaliya: performance: historical & mythic past into the lives of the living
Intercultural misunderstanding ! A non-African listener assumes is an item of music may be the voice of an
ancestor to an African; sounds like music but they might not think of it that way
Listening Examples Ghana: Agbekor 1. Postal Workers (Ghana) This track exhibits the general characteristics of the music and
music-culture of Sub-Saharan Africa 2. Agbekor (5 songs)
This track is a field recording consisting of 5 songs for a funeral, featuring 3 different rhythmic styles: 3 slow-paced, 1 free-rhythm and 1 fast paced. - Song 1 announces that people should prepare for the arrival of the Agbekor procession - Song 2 urges Manyo and his warriors to “be cunning” - Song 3 celebrate the singer’s power and denigrating the opponent - Song 4 compares the Agbekor group’s strength with the power of the ocean and derides the potency of the enemy’s weapons - Song 5 opens with the vivid image of a confrontation between two war gods. The warriors are preparing
3. Demo of Agbekor rhythms This track features the double bell part as it relates to each instrument in the Agbekor ensemble. It presents the instruments in the following order: bell and shaker, bell and baby drum, bell and mother drum, bell and 1st twin brother, bell and 2nd twin brother, and then all the instruments except from the master drum, which doesn’t play a repeating pattern. Each instrument experiences and interacts with the bell pattern individually. The bell corresponds to a 4- and a 6-beat meter. The shaker and baby drum have a “call-and-response” relationship, where the shaker is the “A”, and the bell is the “fri-ca” in “A-fri-ca”. This is a compound duple rhythm that establishes the strong 4-beat compound meter in the ensemble.
Mbira Tradition of the Shona 4. Taireva This track features buzzing timbre of the mbira 5. Nhemamusasa 1 This track starts with one mbira playing the kushaura part
until 0:47, when the second mbira joins in with the kutsinhira part. Together they create a rich polyphonic and polymetric sound. The music becomes more danceable with the addition of the solid compound duple meter of the hosho at 1:46.
6. Nhemamusasa 2 This track features clapping patterns and participatory vocalizing, as well as yodeling by the main singer.
7. Nyamaropa This track features alternating yodeling and low-pitched vocal syllables.
8. Mbiriviri This track features yodeling as well as sung and spoken text. 9. Thomas Mapfumo: Shumba This track features two guitars and a bass guitar playing the
kushaura and kutsinhira parts from the mbira tradition. The high hat on the drum set is playing the hosho part. Mapfumo sings, and adds some of the low-pitched vocal.
10. Thomas Mapfumo: Nyarara Makudzi Wangu
This track features the same as track 9, with the addition of the clapping patterns, yodeling, and spoken text that are commonly associated with the traditional mbira genre.
Jaliya Tradition of the Mande 11. Sorrie This track features balafon with vocals. The balafon starts
with birimintingo, and then establishes the metrical rhythm of the kumbengo part. The voices start with pre-composed, sing-songy donkilo, and after a birimintingo break, a solo voice sings improvised, melismatic, more intense sataro style – this followed by the donkilo
12. Sinyaro This track features kora with vocals. The kora starts with birimintingo, and then establishes the metrical rhythm of the kumbengo part. The voices start with pre-composed, sing-songy donkilo, and after a birimintingo break, a solo voice sings improvised, melismatic, more intense sataro style – this followed by the donkilo
13. Lambango The repeating pattern of the kora and konkon establish the tonal and rhythmic context for the song. A male, who plays the kora, and provides spoken commentary in the form of affirmation and elaboration, supports the main female vocalist. Celebrates 3 20th century leaders – praise lyrics
14. Salif Keita: Mandjou A song in praise of the Griots of Mali. 15. Salif Keita: Mandela A song in praise of Nelson Mandela (he counts the 27 years of
Mandela’s imprisonment. 16. Salif Keita: Africa A song celebrating all of Africa. 17. Salif Keita: Seydou This song features the balafon. 18. Salif Keita: Dakan-Fe This song has a reggae beat. !!!!!
MUNM 3113 Prof. Arana
Study Guide Exam 3: Native American General Characteristics of Native American Music
• Currently about 535 tribes • Navajo: largest tribe in the US, strong tradition, but also open to new ideas • Traditionally, music serves as a mediator between man & the supernatural world • Songs are not composed, but given to them by guardian spirits in dreams/visions • The music is measured by its ability to integrate into society, ceremonial and social
events, represent it to the outside, and its supernatural power • Vocal music with no multiple parts, almost monophonic (strophic songs) • Short songs sung in large groups, one or two lines repeated many times • Falsetto: vocal range for the man is almost like opera • Vocables (pulsations, pushes, slides) • Common instruments: voice, drums, rattles, crappers, and flute
Plains Indians (track 1) ! Blackfoot, Arapaho, Cheyenne, Comanche ! Abundant natural resources, and are not in conflict with other people ! Permanent settlements because they have no need to travel and find resources ! Stomp dance community were forced out of E. Woodlands and moved into OK ! Celebrate and give thanks to the lord through music (hymns) ! Euphoric reward after performing the dance for hours, people outside the tribe
aren’t welcome ! Large-double sided skin drums ! Music is nasal, with high pitches and frequent falsettos, repetition, no regular
meter, powwow music, sharp emphasis, pulsation & glide ! Sioux Grass dance: toe-heel movement, war dance, sleigh bells, jingle dancing
Eastern Woodlands Indians (track 2-3) • SE Creek, Cherokee, Iroquis (between Mississippi river & Atlantic) • Flat, dry land with bison/buffalo that migrates, so they had to travel with it • Compete with other tribes for the same resources • War dances & War mentality • Honor the warriors, they take the scalps and het the hair of others that they killed
and it flies around when they dance • Huge drums because the bison skin can cover a large area • Everyone bangs together and there are no interlocking parts - one strong powerful
sound that is even pulsed is the HEARTBEAT of the people • Quiver dance (Warrior’s Stomp dance song) • Call-and-response, more relaxed
Southwest Indians (track 4-6) • Navajo reservation: more than 200,000, largest tribe • Dry desert with not a lot of bison, spent a lot of time praying for good weather
because they can irrigate land, but they have to be sedentary because of this • Long complex ceremonies – enemyway (curing, ghosts), nightway (curing, gifts) • Large melodic intervals, tense vocals using pulsation and falsetto, shouts • Ancestor, religious, bold experiments in artistic forms • Circle Dance, Sway, Two-step, Skip Dance, Gift songs
Alaska Indians (track 7) • Throat singing
The Modern Powwow (track 8-12) • The Poncas were the first to practice this ceremony • Intertribal gathering and a celebration of culture • Historically, tribes in NA held ceremonies celebrating successful hunts, food
gathering or warfare • Performance of traditional and modernized music & dance; “healing ceremony” • Drum is sacred (their heartbeat) • Double-headed drums with single skin & container rattles • Regalia: an outfit that includes special emblems and symbols • Powwow is in the hands of those who are practicing it rather than their ancestors –
they make it more fun and relevant • Northern style: Higher pitching falsetto • Southern style: Moderate
Personnel • MC/Emcee: master of ceremonies - controls and sets the tempo • Arena director: keeper of the circle • Head man: the leading male dancer • Princesses: Indian royalty
Sequence of events • Grand Entry: flag bearers, veterans, powwow princess dancers, old-young • Flag song: the Native American national song • Intertribal dances: most common, song for everyone to dance • Competition dances: features multiple drum groups that take turns accompanying
dancers • Honor song: a song sung at the end as a sign of respect and pride
Women’s dance styles • Southern Cloth
o Feet in contact with earth o Tee-dress, apron, belt, cloth
• Buckskin o Tall, straight, and proud, gliding, fringes like breeze through tree o Dress made of buckskin with fringes
• Jingle Dress o Sound jingles is a prayer that someone is healed o Metal on dresses made from chewing tobacco lids
• Fancy shawl o Virtuosic dancing meant to resemble butterfly o Bright colors, elaborate garments, outstretched shawl
Men’s dance styles • Straight
o Steady, slow, flowing pace dance with no extra footwork o Eagle feather, ribbon shirt, drop, garters and belts, bells
• Northern traditional o Simulating animal’s during hunt – war dance o Eagle feathers, ankle bells, porcupine headwear, bustles, staff
• Grass dance o Stamping on high grass o Long grass ribbons/braids
• Fancy dance o Virtuosic, rapid footwork, spins, jumps, and dips – war dance o Bright colors, elaborate garments, bustles
Native American Flute (track 13-19) • Introduced in Oklahoma in the 1970s by Doc Tate Nevaquaya (Comanche, Plains) • The legend states that the first flute was created when woodpeckers pecked holes
in hollow branches while searching for termites, and when the wind blew along the holes, people nearby heard its music
• Vertical flute made of cedar, walnut, birch, and other woods • Mouthpiece, block/nest, finger wholes • Played solo for courting women • Warbling sound • Vibrato techniques • R. Carlos Nakai (Navajo) • Mary Youngblood (Inuit)
Contemporary Performers (track 20-24)
• Native American Rap Artists • Shadowyze • War Party
Muskogee Creek Hymns (from the film “This may be the last time”)
• Muscogee Creek • Seminole hymns is an unique a singing style that originates from Europe • The hymns are sung to comfort and pray, and originates from their ancestors trail
of tears (cross the river of death) • The hymns are passed down from generation to generation; they were never
taught, rather learned • Heaven is sometimes a code for the trail of tears – reunited with the lost ones • The first American music that embraces the 3 major cultures of the nascent US
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Listening(Examples((!
General Characteristics 1. Sioux Grass Dance song (Plains)
Consistent, low drums; fluctuating high/low vocables; portamento slide; war dance, pulsate their vocables
2. Iroquois Quiver Dance (Eastern Woodlands) 3. Stomp Dance: Muskogee (Eastern Woodlands)
Stomp dance, call-and-response (call is text, response is vocables), low-pitched voices, singing about women Stomp dance, call-and-response (call/response is identical), rattles
4. Lullaby: Zuni (SW) 5. Yeibichai song (SW) 6. Circle Dance song: Navaho (SW)
Solo female voice, repetition of both melody and rhythm, almost free rhythm & only 2 pitches, monophonic Rattle shakers, vocals, drums, more complex, quick, constant rhythm, 2 basic parts: high/low, falsetto and portamento, used in nightway ceremonies, large intervals Vocables, repetition, singing together, (Shizhane’e: used in enemyway ceremonies)
7. Inuit Throat Singing (Alaska)
Throat singing
The Modern Powwow 8. Veteran’s song (S) Consistent drums, lead singer starts, honoring the veterans 9. Intertribal song (N) Consistent drum, much pulsation, field recording, introduced by
MC, vocables, high pitch, Canada 10. Pawnee Desert Storm song (S)
Consistent drums, lead singer starts, about Saddam Hussein, bells
11. Grand Entry song (N) Consistent drum, lead singer starts, high pitch, 12. Round Dance (S) Uneven drumbeats, typical of round dances and two-step dances.
The 1st chorus is vocables, and the 2nd chorus is in English Plains Flute 13. Doc Tate Nevaquaya – Comanche Moon
Thick tenderness, vibrating timbre, synthesizer
14. R. Carlos Nakai: Shaman’s call
Solo flute, clean sound,
15. R. Carlos Nakai: Two World Concerto by James DeMars
Flute and string instruments playing together
16. R. Carlos Nakai: Jackalope
Flute and idiophones
17. Mary Youngblood: Beneath the Raven Moon
(Start sounds like an eagle). Dual chambered flute creating double-pitch, repeating pattern, accompanies by drums, modernizing flute playing
Contemporary Performers 19. Shadowyze: Ancestral Spirits
Starts with flute, ancestral spirits
20. War Party: This Land Was Ourz
Contemporary, rap
21. War Party: Lyrical Pow Wow
Powwow intro, contemporary
22. War Party: Feelin’ Reserved
Contemporary
23. War Party: Just Ain’t Right
Contemporary
!!
Social Dances: Round Dance & Two-Step is a round dance; it is the type of song that you might hear at a 49, which is the name given to the party that happens after a powwow, at a neutral location. !
World&Music&Study&Guide:&Latin&America&!General&features&&
• More!influence!globally!than!other!Latin!American!music!!• Cuba!is!an!island!in!the!Caribbean!(used!to!be!under!Spain)!• In!the!1900s!other!places!was!not!allowed!to!drink!or!sell!alcohol,!so!people!
went!to!Cuba!to!party,!and!from!1920s,!music!was!recorded!in!Cuba!!• Tango!was!the!first!Latin!American!dance!known!in!the!US!and!Europe!• Andean!4!basic!instruments!!
o Panpipes!&!Quena!(flutes,!Indigenous)!!o Charango!(small!string!instrument,!Spain)!!o Bamboo!(drum)!!
• Influenced!by!Africa!o Rhythmic!percussion!and!vocal!chants!!o Drums,!bata!drums!or!congas!!
• Influenced!by!Europe!(mostly!Spain)!o Melodic!instruments,!songs!and!dances!!o Violin,!Spanish!guitar,!Charango!
• Influenced!by!the!Indigenous!!o Circle!dances,!panpipes,!quena,!Andean!drums!!o Pan!flutes!Q!hocketing!technique,!almost!interlocking!o Quena!Q!vertical!notched!flute,!played!during!the!rainy!season,!often!
in!pairs;!one!playing!melody!and!one!playing!harmony!!Spanish&roots&&
• Guajira&&&Contraversia&o Two!Spanish!population!settled!down!in!Cuba,!one!rich!group!that!
was!more!like!classical!music,!and!one!poor!group!that!was!troubadours!and!known!for!the!Decima!songs!!
o The!Decima!song!form!is!improvised!rhyming!lyrics!with!10!lines!and!8!syllables!each!(A/B/B/A!–!pause!–!A/C/C/D)!
o Contraversa,!a!subgenre!of!guajira,!are!informal!performances!that!often!take!form!of!a!duel!between!two!singerQpoets!!
o Guitar,!tres,!guiro!and!maracas!!African&roots&&
• Santeria&o African!slaves!resisted!the!Christian!religion!o Santeria!(the!worship!of!the!saints):!sacred!music!based!mostly!on!
Yoruba!traditions!from!West!Africa!!o The!Yoruba’s!formed!societies!called!cabildos!to!help!each!other!
survive!slavery!and!preserve!their!cultural!roots!o Rhythm!speeds!up!to!facilitate!possession!!o Each!orisha!is!associated!with!particular!colors,!myths,!herbs,!dances!
and!songs!!o Chango!(thunder!god),!Yemaya!(ocean!goddess),!Eleggua!(god!of!the!
roads),!Ochun!(love!goddess),!Ogun!(god!of!iron)!• Rumba&
o Rumba:!the!nonQreligious!side!of!the!percussion!music!brought!to!Cuba!by!the!African!slaves,!and!is!secular!music!and!dance!
o They!played!rumba!when!they!wanted!to!party!or!celebrate!o The!basic!form!of!rumba!has!remained!constant!o Percussion!and!voiceQbased!ensemble!(congas!or!cajon!and!claves)!!o Clave!plays!repeating!pattern,!and!is!the!highQpitched!timeQkeeper!o Rumba!has!3!main!styles:!
! Guaguanco!• Male!&!female,!dance!of!sexual!competition!• Rumba!clave!!• With!vacunao!gesture!during!the!call/response!• Often!begins!with!soloist!singing!meaningless!syllables!
called!“Diana”!• Decimar!(improviced!lyrics)!• Montuno!(chorus)!!
! Colombia!(men’s!dance,!circle!around!dancer,!battle)!!! Yambu!(couples!dance,!mimics!old!people)!
Blend&of&Africa&and&Europe&(mostly&Spain)&• Tumba&Fresca&
o AfroQCuban!dance!that!blends!French!style!contra!dances!with!African!drumming!
o Elegant!dance!style!(France)!+!drumming!&!call/response!(Cuba)!o Came!to!Eastern!Cuba!after!the!Haitian!Revolution,!when!many!
French!colonists!fled!Haiti!with!their!slaves!and!ended!up!in!Cuba!o Tumba!Fresca!means!“drumming!French”!!
• Changui&o Couples!dance!that!blends!African!and!European!dance!elements!o European!couple!dance!+!Yambu!style!movements!!o Tres,!guitar!(Spain)!+!rhythm!sections!with!bongos,!call/response,!
marimbula!(Africa),!maracas!&!guiro!(Indigenous)!• Son&
o One!of!the!most!influential!of!all!the!early!forms!of!Cuban!music!o People!used!these!musical!gatherings!to!air!out!pet!peeves!and!
frustrations!o Spread!all!over!the!Caribbean!o Parent!form!of!salsa!!o Son!groups!used!six!instruments!and!were!called!Sextetos!!o Call!and!response!section!called!montuno,!and!a!decimal!section!
(rhyming!section)!that!tells!the!story!!o Tres,!guitar,!bongos,!maracas,!guiro!and!clave!!
!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!Andean&Music!1.!Kutirimunapaq! Hocketing,!creates!a!strong!connection!with!each!other,!
big!assembly,!usually!dance!in!a!circle!Starts!with!drums!and!bell!faster!and!faster,!then!the!panpipes!joins!!
2.!Panpipes! Hocketing,!begins!with!one!player,!then!two!players!!One!flute!playing!pure!tones,!then!drums!and!second!pipe!joins!
3.!Quena!&!Charango! Quena!(indigenous)!&!Charango!(Spain)!!4.!Illumán!Tiyu! Quena!(indigenous)!and!violin!(European),!starts!with!
violin!and!bombo!bass!drum!Cuban&Music&5.!Guantanamera!(Guajira)! Guajira!genre,!starts!with!tres!guitar,!maracas,!sticks!
(African!influence),!not!strict!to!the!rhyme!scheme,!most!famous!song!in!the!Guajira!genre!Guitar!starts,!0:20!the!rest!of!the!instruments!joins!
6.!Bata!Drums!for!Chango!(Santeria)!!
Calling!to!Chango!(god!of!thunder),!bata!drums,!speed!increases!to!facilitate!possession!!
7.!Yemaya!(Santería)! Calling!to!Yemaya!(goddess!of!the!ocean),!call!and!response,!sung!in!Yoruba!language,!bata!drums,!speed!increases!to!facilitate!possession!!
8.!Consuelate!Como!Yo!(Guaguanco)!!
Rumba!Guagancó!accompanied!by!percussion,!lead!“diana”!rambling!(lo!lo!lo!la),!2:45!–!switch!to!call!and!response,!!
9.!Papa!Ogun!(Guaguanco)! Rumba!Guagancó,!recorded!in!studio,!sings!the!word!“Diana”!in!the!“diana”Qpart,!“montuno”Qpart!–!switch!of!pace!and!drumming!!
10.!Muchacha!No!Seas!Boba!(Son)!
Son,!string!instruments,!starts!with!montuno,!then!it!goes!into!the!rhyming!section!
11.!El!Son!Y!Sus!Instrumentos!(Son)!!
Son,!string,!drums,!trompet,!rhyming!section,!then!montuno!section!as!a!drum!solo,!and!then!back!to!the!rhyming!section!
!!!